Native American Humor

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Native American Humor’

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Native American Humor i

NATIVE AMERICAN HUMOR EDITED

BY

WAMU S ORUteA Tees

eS

LEO

HARPER NEW

eRe AWD Es DB

SW Boot

ay:

HERSHFIELD

&@ BROTHERS YORK

AND

PUBLISHERS LONDON

COPYRIGHT, OF

1947,

AMERICA.

MAY

BE

BY

HARPER

RIGHTS

REPRODUCED

PERMISSION ARTICLES

ALL

EXCEPT

AND

IN

IN THE

REVIEWS.

&

IN THIS ANY

BOOK

PRINTED

ARE

MANNER

CASE FOR

BROTHERS.

OF BRIEF

WHATSOEVER QUOTATIONS

INFORMATION

FIRST

ADDRESS

2-7 EDITION A-W

IN

RESERVED.

NO

THE

UNITED

PART

OF

WITHOUT EMBODIED HARPER

STATES

THE

BOOK

WRITTEN IN CRITICAL

&

BROTHERS.

Table of Contents ns HOW

TO RECEIVE Hucu

Henry

A CHALLENGE

BrRAcKENRIDGE

_ ALMANACK DROLLERIES ANONYMOUS

DEFINITION Parrick Henry

BATTLE OF THE KEGS The New Jersey Gazette PITHY REPLY ANONYMOUS

DR. FRANKLIN ANONYMOUS

BRING BACK MY BONNIE

12

ANONYMOUS

HUMOURS

OF WELL-FED

DOMINIE

ANONYMOUS

THE INDIAN TREATY

DOUBLE-CHIN

2

MAN

Hucs Henry BRACKENRIDGE

JACK AND GILL, A SCHOLARLY COMMENTARY JosgrH DENNIE FAMILY PORTRAITS FROM COCKLOFT HALL WasuincTon Irvine and James Kirxe PauLpinc TEND TO YOUR PART

20

ANONYMOUS

GREEN MOUNTAINS ANONYMOUS

BOY

CENTER SHOT Anonymous

42

44

LO5%14

TABLE

View

OF

CONTENTS

MY FIRST VISIT TO PORTLAND SEBA SMITH

45

A USEFUL COON SKIN Davin CrocKkETT

48

51

SOFT SAWDER Tuomas CHANDLER THE

HarisurTON

54

HOSS SWAP Aucustus Batpwin

CHARACTER

LoNGSTREET

60

OF THE VIRGINIANS

Joseru G. BaLpwin TWO

PENN STATE ANONYMOUS

THE TRUMPET ANonyMous THE

65

PUNGENTS

67

SOUNDS

GREAT CHARTER Cornetius MAaTHews

CONTEST

IN GOTHAM

69

MISSISSIPPI POLITICS, YANKEE-STYLE Anonymous and J. F. H. Crarworne

76

INDIAN SIGN ANONYMOUS

78

TRAINING DAY H. H. Riney

79

LILLY DAVY AND OLE GOLIAH Baynarp Rust Harty

82

THE HOOSIER

85

Dan

MarsrEe

PROOF ALBERT

88 PrKE

FOX GRAPES WiutiaAM Tappan THompPson

89

DECLARATION ANONYMOUS

94

OF INDEPENDENCE

MY FIRST CALL IN THE SWAMP Henry Cray Lewis (Madison Tensas) UNREHEARSED Sout Smit

06

STAGE EFFECT

103

POLITICS MAKES BEDFELLOWS Henry S. Foorsr

105

TAKING THE CENSUS Jounson J. Hooprer

106

TABLE

OF

CONTENTS

NEVER BET THE DEVIL YOUR Epcar ALLAN Pog

HEAD

TURNED TABLES ANONYMOUS

MIKE HOOTER’S TALL BAR STORY WirtiiaMmM Harri

AN UNFORTUNATE

RACE

120

Sot SmiTH

FROLIC IN THE KNOBS Georce

I21

WasuHincTron Harris

THE SHIFTY MAN Jounson J. Hooper SOMEBODY IN MY BED ANONYMOUS

THE FINISHING-UP COUNTRY Tuomas

Bancs THORPE

SHAKING HANDS Epwarp EveRETT

WHAR

JOE WENT

TO

ANONYMOUS

FARE YOU WELL, JOE CLARK ANONYMOUS

UP TO THE LORD Jounson J. Hooper GOING TO BED BEFORE A YOUNG LADY Attributed to SrepHEN A. Douc as

SLOSHIN ABOUT ANONYMOUS

A SLEEP-WALKING

INCIDENT

ANONYMOUS

UNCLE JOSIE AND T. A. Burke

THE

SHERIFF

MY FIRST APPEARANCE AT THE BAR Josep G. Batpwin LAW ON THE FRONTIER Samus,

179

190

A. Hammetr

SORRY COOPERING ANONYMOUS

193

TABLE

Vile HOW

DADDY LOVINGOOD PLAYED Grorcr WasHINGTON Harris

HOSS

OF

CONTENTS 194

MISS ALBINA McLUSH N. P. Wix.I1s

199

THE DEACON’S TROUT Henry Warp BEECHER

202

A PIANO IN ARKANSAS Tuomas Bancs THORPE

204

LIGHTWOOD ANoNYMoUS

209

BROADWAY 'THEATRICS, 1855 Mortmer Tompson (Q. K. Philander Doesticks)

pp)

PARSON BULLEN’S LIZARDS Grorcre WaAsHINGTON Harris

217

MELANCHOLY

223

ACCIDENT

Grorce Horatio Dersy (John Phoenix) PRENTICIANA Georce D. Prentice (In the Louisville Journal)

225

SAN DIEGO Georcge Horatio Dersy

226 (John Phoenix)

THINGS IN GENERAL Henry WHEELER SuaAw (Josh Billings)

228

HEZEKIAH BEDOTT Frances Mirntram WHuicHer

231

ILLUSTRATED NEWSPAPERS Georce Horatio Dersy (John Phoenix)

234

CRITIQUE OF THE PLAINS, ODE SYMPHONIE PAR JABEZ TARBOX Georce Horatio Dersy (John Phoenix) MINORITY REPORT

238

242

Jonatuan F. Keiiey HOW

CONGRESS Wittiam

HOW

GOVERNS

246

Wirt Hower

ABE RECEIVED THE NEWS CuarLes Farrar Browne (Artemus Ward)

THE LATEST

IMPROVEMENTS

IN ARTILLERY

Rosert H. Newerxt (Orpheus C. Kerr) SPECIAL ORDER Anonymous

251 254 257

TABLE

OF

CONTENTS

THE YANKEE OF IT Jamzs Roserts Girmore (Edmund Kirke) HONEST ABE’S INSTANCES ANONYMOUS SHILOH ANONYMouUS

WAIFS AND STRAYS FROM THE LATE UNPLEASANTNESS ANONYMOUS

GAIN FOR SOMEBODY ANONYMOUS

THE EVIDENCE IN THE CASE SamuEL L. Cremens (Mark Twain)

DEHORNING

THE DILEMMA

ANONYMOUS

PETROLEUM V. NASBY ATTEMPTS TO DRAW Davio

Ross

THE COLOR

LINE

Locke

ADVERTISING P. T. Barnum TELL AND KISS Cuarves H. Smit

(Bill Arp)

NEWSPAPER CAUSTICS AMBROSE BIERCE MATTER OF A HAT ANONYMOUS SAM

SNAFFLES—AMERICAN Witi1am Gitmore Simms

A VERY

FRIENDLY

MUNCHAUSEN

HORSE

James M. Battey WOMAN’S PLACE Davip Ross Locxe HOSPITAL FOR LIARS ANONYMOUS THE

UNITED STATES OF BOSTON Cuartes Hesper Crarx (Max Adeler)

JUD BROWNIN HEARS Georce W. Bacsy

RUBY

PLAY

TABLE

xX

A JERSEY CENTENARIAN Franois Bret Harte

WOMAN

OF

CONTENTS

338

NATURE

ANONYMOUS

THE FRUSTRATED BLUEJAYS SamuEL L. Cremens (Mark Twain) BRER RABBIT AND BRER FOX Jorx CHANDLER Harris CHANGE THE NAME OF ARKANSAS? ANONYMOUS

THE NATURE OF BOYS Rozert J. BurDETTE GENESIS OF A WARD-HEELER Rurus E. SHarLey

THE KILL-MA-ROO Mexvitxe D. Lanpon (Eli Perkins) TEXAS CLIMATE A. E. Sweet

A RESIGN Epcar Witson Nye (Bill Nye) ABRAM JASPER’S PARABLE Attributed to Henry Watterson

UNKINDEST

CUT

Anonymous

NOTES

ON ‘THE AUTHORS

383

Editor’s Foreword

Tene book rounds up some of the most telling examples of the American sense of humor during our age of great laughter—from Revolutionary times when its voice began to burst out clearly, through the » turmoil of the Frontier and Civil War periods when it was at its most exuberant, to the 1890’s when it was in danger of prattling itself into whimsy and commercial jokesmithing. The collection is not an antiquarian study. Its only purpose is to entertain. All entries were chosen for ability to stand on their own feet as humor. Included are sketches and tales by familiar humorists, ranging from Washington Irving to Bill Nye and Mark Twain. We are apt to think of these writers as mavericks rather than true representatives of a time which seems pretty stiff and declamatory, judged by the dreary halftones in textbooks, the lumpish, bird-bedropped public monuments, and most of the writing allowed to come down to us. Today, even such masters of fun-making as Josh Billings, John Phoenix, and Petroleum V. Nasby are little more than classroom hearsay. Equally hearty humorous creations— including Sut Lovingood, Sam Snaffles, and Simon Suggs, three characters which by right ought to be American classics—have been abandoned by the dozens to potters field. At best they are vaguely associated with gags of the stale “by cracky!” type. For that we owe a grudge to the clique of New England literary gentlemen who appointed themselves custodians of our national culture. They were the ones who lowered the drape of starched respectability between their century and ours. It’s high time to brush it aside and reclaim the laughter of a younger America for the delightful portion of our heritage that it is. Some of the best writing of the period went, gratis, to newspapers and periodicals under pen names and anonymity. The authors were tramp printers, soldiers, reporters, preachers, doctors, editors, lawyers, politicians, xi

EDITOR § FOREWORD

xii: merchants,

swindlers,

steamboat

captains,

actors,

schoolmasters.

‘They

rubbed elbows daily with the vigorous life of their times and reported it with shrewdly humorous insight. In laughing at the hurlyburly of America, they knowingly laughed at themselves as part and parcel of it. That is the core of our native sense of humor. Many of these unknown writers were gifted enough to have become major literary figures. But until 1846, when U.S. copyright regulations went into effect, it was next to impossible to make a living from writing in America. Editors loaded their magazines, gift annuals, and book lists with pirated stuff. Particularly they considered British publications fair game, and filched wholesale from them without so much as a thank-you. Pilferings back and forth across the sea continued to some extent until the international copyright agreement of 1891. Meanwhile, the literary roost was ruled by those cultural backwoodsmen whose horizon was just about limited to the view from the steeple of the Old North Church. Drs. Holmes, Whittier, Emerson, and Long-

fellow proscribed realism, especially humorous realism, as vulgarity. ‘They and their editorial followers held that the proper duty of writers was moral uplift, whether by essay, poesy, fiction, or breakfast table chitchat. On at least one occasion, they made Mark Twain himself writhe in humiliation like a worm in salt. By the latter part of the 19th Century, their censorship had a strong ally from outside. The portly and proper shadow of Victoria the Good, reaching across the English-speaking world,

had become the substance of an age.

;

Put together as it has been, with an eye to the American sense of humor

as such, the book contains amusing swatches from lives and writing that

drop into no formal category of wit or humor. Liberties have been taken with the texts of many selections. To give the broadest possible. crosssection in a limited space, it has been necessary to blue-pencil nearly every

piece. Some have been cut to a third of their original leisurely length. In several cases that called for internal rearrangement. Some of the selections would have slowed modern reading because of elaborate misspelling. I haven’t hesitated to reduce this to a minimum. In a handful of exceptions —notably the Petroleum V. Nasby sketch—translation would have spoiled the effect. When an obscure topical point cropped up, it was eliminated unless it keyed organically into the piece. Then brief explanation was added in the author's style. If two or more versions of the same story occurred, the best features were combined. For example, Frolic in the Knobs has woven

EDITOR S FOREWORD

-

xiii

into it bits from five mountain shindig sketches by George Washington Harris. There has been considerable retitling. Selections have been arranged roughly in chronological order, with whatever deviations variety required. In gathering the anthology, I have read more than 4oo books, the files of almost as many magazines and newspapers, and spot-checked literally thousands of others. No one-volume collection can be exhaustive. Regretfully I have had to count out such entertaining things as the journals of Madam Sarah Kemble Knight and William Byrd of Westover, P. B. Shillaber’s malaprop Mrs. Partington, and Charles Graham Halpine’s Private Miles O'Reilly. The flavor of them can’t be got from extracts. You need to read them in full. Other humorous writers of the period simply didn’t amuse me. Among these were Freneau, Trumbull, Barlow, Halleck, Verplanck, Lowell, Hays, Asa Green, Willis Gaylord Clark, Kennedy, Cozzens, Goodrich, Lewis, Adams, ‘Townsend, and most particularly Miss Marietta Holley who perpetrated the cornfed Josiah Allen’s Wife series. Eugene Field’s acid

Denver Tribune Primer makes me laugh out loud. Not so with my publishers and my patient jury of friends. So out it went. ‘The collection stops ‘short of Mr. Dooley because he belongs to the modern school of American humor. Besides, he is liberally represented in other anthologies. The foreword has been kept short. Readers interested in further detail will find tucked at the back of the book notes on as many of the writers as I have been able to track down. James R. AsweEii

Native

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How to Receive a Challenge Hucu

Henry

BRACKENRIDGE

Major Valentine Jacko, Lies.) Anny: Sir,—

I have two objections to this duel matter. The one is, lest I should hurt you; and the other is, lest you should hurt me. I do not see any good it would do me to put a bullet through any part of your body. I could make no use of you when dead for any culinary purpose as I would a rabbit or a turkey. I am no cannibal to feed on the flesh of men. Why, then, shoot down a human creature of which I

could make no use? A buffalo would be better meat. For though your flesh may be delicate and tender, yet it wants that firmness and consistency which takes and retains salt. At any rate, it would not be fit for long sea voyages. You might make a good barbecue, it is true, being of the nature of a racoon or an opossum, but people are not in the habit of barbecuing anything human now. As to your hide, it is not worth taking off, being little better than that of a year-old colt. It would seem to me a strange thing to shoot at a man that would stand still to be shot at, inasmuch as I have heretofore been used to shoot at

things flying or running or jumping. Were you on a tree now like a squirrel, endeavoring to hide yourself in the branches, or like a racoon that after much eyeing and spying, I observe at length in the crotch of a

tall oak with boughs and leaves intervening, so that I could just get a sight of his hinderparts, I should think it pleasurable enough to take a shot at you. But, as it is, there is no skill or judgment requisite to discover or take you down. As to myself, I do not much like to stand in the way of anything harmI

pape

eh

NATIVE

AMERICAN

HUMOR

ful. I am under apprehensions that you might hit me. That being the case, I think it most advisable to stay at a distance. If you want to try your pistols, take some object, a tree or a barn door, about my dimensions. If you hit that, send me word and I shall acknowledge that if I had been in the same place, you might also have hit me. John Farrago Late Captain, Pennsylvania Militia. 1796

Almanack Drolleries ANONYMOUS

\ VEN Sir William Johnson was appointed superintendent of Indian affairs, and went among the Mohawk, he was received and feasted by Hendrick, King of that nation, who speedily instructed him in the habits and customs of his people. He said that the Mohawk considered dreams as prophetic and that he trusted that the representative of His Majesty would conceive that any breach in that age-old custom would reflect unfortunately in respect to the regard the Mohawk felt for the subjects of Britain. Sir William, cannily acknowledging that the British fully respected the usage of the country, Hendrick thus spoke: “Last night I dreamed. I dreamed that the Great King would present me © with a scarlet coat, of fine make, and ornamented with gold and silver.”

“True for your dream,” said Sir William Johnson. “Come you to me tomorrow, Hendrick.” Which, he doing, he was given a beautiful coat, with

scallops of gold braid and buttons of silver gilt. Whereupon, after Hendrick had professed himself exceedingly pleased, Sir William said, “Last night, I, too, had a dream. I fancied, Hendrick, that

you gave me deed and title to a parcel of 5,000 of the richest acres along the Mohawk River.” The following day Hendrick solemnly conveyed to Sir William a title to the aforesaid acres, and the Sovereign subsequently confirmed the deed. Then, the next day, Sir William, being after all an Irishman, said, “And what did you chance to dream last night, Hendrick?” “My sleep was without dream,” said the Mohawk. “Come now, Hendrick,” said Sir William. “You must have dreamed something.” “No,” said the Mohawk. “That I did not. Sir William, never again shall I dream with you. You dream too big for an Indian.” 3

Ons

NATIVE

AMERICAN

A clergyman of Boston was offended in his dignity him without doffing his hat. “Do you know who I am, sir, that you pass me way?” he said. “You are better fed than taught.” The lad, who was quite stout of build and ruddy, master. You only teaches me of Sundays, but I feed

HUMOR

by a lad who passed in that unmannerly

said, “May it be so, myself.”

During the last election, a candidate visited a countryman in Pennsylvania, pressing for his vote, promising to turn out the party at present in

power and to procure a new officialdom. “Then I won’t vote for you,” said the farmer.

“Why not?” asked the candidate. “{ thought you were a champion of your country,” said the farmer. “So I am,” said the candidate. “So am I,” said the farmer. “For that reason, I don’t want to change

administrations.” “That requires explanation,” said the candidate, now wroth.

Said the countryman, “I know well, when I buy hogs lean, they eat like gluttons. But, when once they’ve got a little fat, they don’t want half so much to keep ’em. So for that reason, I’m for sticking to the present set. They'll not devour half as much as the new one!” Engraven on the headstones in the grave yards of New England are many wise and wry observations, of which the two following will serve as examples of an entire category: HERE

LIE THE UNTIMELY BY

THE IN

HE

LEFT

BEHIND,

WHOSE

REMAINS

OF

SAMUEL

JOINED

TO

HIS

FALL A

WHOSE WILLING

)

A CHIMNEY

WINDSTORM.

JANE,

ADDRESS

OF

E

MAKER

HIS COMELY

YOUNG

IS 23 BEDFORD

DISPOSITION TO

BE

IS

WIDOW,

STREET,

ONE

COMFORTED.

And another:

BENEATH THIS SILENT STONE IS LAID A NOISY, ANTIQUATED MAID, WHO, FROM HER CRADLE, TALKED TILL DEATH, AND NE'ER BEFORE WAS OUT OF BREATH.

ALMANACK

DROLLERIES

SS

WHITHER SHE'S GONE, WE CANNOT TELL, FOR, IF SHE TALKS NOT, SHE'S IN HELL: IF SHE'S IN HEAVEN, SHE'S THERE UNBLEST;

SHE HATES A PLACE OF REST.

If a book can’t answer for itself to the public, it is of no sort of purpose for its author to do so. Law are like cobwebs,

which

catch

the small flies but are broken

through by the large ones. Modesty is a kind of fear that keeps a good man on the bottom. Patience under misfortunes, is like opiates in a fever; tossing and ‘ tumbling only irritate the distemper. Politics makes a man as crooked as a pack does a peddler; both teach a

man to stoop.

'

Mix whisky and water, and you spoil two good things. One day a gentleman was caught kissing a homely bar maid. When rallied by his friends, he said, “Thank God, J am not yet reduced to Brandy and Beauty to whet my appetite.”

A somewhat illiterate gentleman in Virginia writes to a merchant in Richmond for a still of certain dimensions, and thus expresses himself: “Sir, I want a still maid that will work 36 gallants.” We believe he meant gallons.

When Thomas Jefferson came to the Court at Paris as the new American Minister, he was introduced to a nobleman, who said, “Ah, yes. You

replace Dr. Franklin, I believe.” “T succeed Dr. Franklin,” Jefferson replied quickly. “No man can replace him.” 1776-1821

Definition Patrick

HENRY

Cesieeen GILES, of Virginia, once addressed a note to Patrick Henry, demanding satisfaction: “Sir: I understand that you have called me a ‘bob-tail’ politician. I wish to know if it be true; and if true, your meaning. “Wm. B. Giles.”

To which Patrick Henry replied: “Sir: I do not recollect having called you a ‘bob-tail’ politician at any time, but think it probable I have. Not recollecting the time or occasion,

I can’t say what I did mean, but if you will tell me what you think I meant, I will say whether you are correct or not. “Very respectfully, “Patrick Henry.” 1780

Battle of the Kegs Tue

New

Jerszty

Gazerre

Jan. 21, 1778— Philadelphia has been entertained with a most astonishing instance of the activity, bravery, and military skill of the Royal Navy of Great Britain. The affair is somewhat particular, and deserves notice. Some time last week, two boys observed a keg of singular construction floating in the river opposite to the city. They got into a small boat, and, attempting to take up the keg, it burst with a great explosion and blew up the unfortunate boys. Yesterday, several kegs of a like construction, made their appearance. An alarm was immediately spread through the city. Various reports prevailed, filling the city and the royal troops with consternation. Some reported that the kegs were filled with armed rebels, who were to issue forth in the dead of night, as the Grecians did of old from their wooden horse at the siege of Troy, and take the city by surprise; asserting that they had seen the points of rebel bayonets through the bungholes of the kegs. Others said they were charged with combustibles, to be kindled by secret machinery, and, setting the whole Delaware in flames, were to consume all the shipping in the harbor. Whilst others asserted that they were constructed by art magic, would of themselves ascend the wharves in the night time, and roll all flaming through the streets of the city, destroying

everything in their way. Be that as it may, certain it is that the shipping in the harbor, and all the wharves in the city were fully manned. The battle began. It was surprising to behold the incessant blaze that was kept up against the enemy, the kegs. Both officers and men exhibited the most unparalleled skill and bravery on the occasion, whilst the citizens stood gazing as solemn witnesses of their prowess. 7

ome

NATIVE

AMERICAN

HUMOR

From the Roebuck and other ships of war, whole broadsides were poured into the Delaware. In short, not a wandering ship, stick, or drift log but felt the vigor of the British arms. The action began about sunrise, and would have been completed with great success by noon, had not an old market woman, coming down the river with provisions, unfortunately let a small keg of butter fall overboard, which (as it was then ebb tide) floated down to the scene of action.

At sight of this unexpected reinforcement of the enemy, the battle was renewed with fresh fury. The firing was incessant till the evening closed the affair. The kegs were either totally demolished, or obliged to fly, as none of them have shown their heads since. It is said His Excellency Lord Howe has dispatched a swift-sailing packet with an account of his victory to the court of London. In a word, Monday, the 5th of January, 1778, must ever be distinguished in history for the memorable BATTLE OF THE KEGS. 1778

Pithy Reply ANONYMOUS

A PERSON

of the name of Palmer, who was a lieutenant in

the new tory levies, was detected in the patriot camp at Peek’s-kiln. He was seized and brought before the court-martial. Intelligence of this reached Governor Tryon, who commanded the tory levies, and he penned a heated note to patriot General Putnam, representing as heinous the crime of trying a man commissioned by his majesty, and threatening vengeance in case he should be condemned and executed. General Putnam wrote him the following reply: ‘Sir, “Nathan Palmer, a lieutenant in your king’s service, was taken in my camp as a spy. He was tried as a spy. He was condemned as a spy. You may rest assured, sir, he shall be hanged as a spy. “T have the honor to be &c.,

“Israel Putnam.” “P.S. Afternoon. He is hanged.” 1796

Dr. Franklin ANONYMOUS

S OME year since, as Dr. Franklin was travelling through New England, he, on a winter's evening, alighted at a tavern, and ordered his horse to be stabled. To the doctor’s mortification, he found that only the public room in the house was accommodated with a fire, and that this was so engrossed by indolent countrymen that he could not approach it, shivering with bone-cold though he was. “Landlord,” said the doctor, “have you oysters?” SYes soir

“Give my horse an half bushel of them.” “Sir! Oysters! Your horse an half bushel of oysters?” . “Yes, Sir. Give him the oysters.” The guest was obeyed; and as the discourse did not escape the attention of the countrymen, curiosity prompted them to repair to the stable to see in what manner the horse would eat the oysters?

But a few minutes, however, passed before the men returned, when the host exclaimed to Dr. Franklin, “Sir, your horse won’t eat the oysters.” “Will he not? Oh, then bring them here and roast them. They will answer for my supper,” said the doctor, now comfortably seated by the fire. Dr. Franklin, as agent for the Province of Pennsylvania, being in England at the time the Parliament passed the stampt-act for America, was freqently applied to by the Ministry for his opinion respecting the operation of the same. He assured them that the people of America would never consent to it.

The act was nevertheless passed, and the events shewed he had been right. After the news of the destruction of the stampt paper had arrived in England, the Ministry again sent for the doctor, to consult with him, and | Ze)

| i |

DR. i

FRANKLIN

De

OriCal

concluded with the proposition, that if the Americans would engage to _pay for the damage done in the destruction of the stampt paper, &c., the Parliament would repeal the act. To this the doctor answered that it put him in mind of a Frenchman, | who having heated a poker red hot, ran into the street, and addressing an Englishman he met there, said, “Hah, monsieur, voulez vous give me de

plaisir et de satisfaction, and let me run dis poker only one foote up your backside?” “What!” says the Englishman. “Only to let me run dis poker one foote up your backside,” says the Frenchman. “Damn your soul!” says the Englishman. “Well, den,” says the Frenchman, pointing to about six inches of the

poker, “only so far.” “No, no, damn your soul!” replies the Englishman. “What do you mean!” “Well, den,” says the Frenchman, “will you have de justice to pay me for de trouble and expence of heating de poker?” Englishmen across the sea, said the doctor, would say to their lordships precisely what the other Englishman said to the Frenchman, “Be damned to you!” A needy friend appealed to Dr. Franklin for aid whilst he was serving as American minister to the French. ‘To which honest Benjamin replied: Paris, April 22, 1784. Dear : I send you herewith a bill for ten louis d’or. I do not pretend to give such a sum, I only lend it to you. When you shall return to your country, you cannot fail of getting into some business that will in time enable you

to pay all your debts. In that case, when you meet with another honest man in similar distress, you must pay me by lending this sum to him, enjoining him to discharge the debt by a like operation, when he shall be able, and shall meet with another such opportunity. I hope it may go thus through many hands before it meets a knave to stop its progress. This is a trick of mine for doing a great deal of good with a little money. I am not rich enough to afford much in good works, and so am obliged to be cunning and make the most of little. Truly Benj. Franklin.

1776-1784

Bring Back My Bonnie ANONYMOUS

In 1784 a Boston paper printed the following advertisement: RAN away from his wife and helpless family, on Friday last, John Spriggs, by trade a tailor, aged thirty-five, a wide mouth, zig-zag teeth, a nose of high-burned brick color, with a lofty bridge, swivel-eyed, and a scar (not an honorable one) on his left cheek. He primes and loads (that

is takes snuff and tobacco); he is so loquacious that he tires every one in company, but himself. In order that he may entrap the sinner and the saint, he carries a Pack of Cards in one pocket, and the Practice of Piety in the other. He is a great liar, and can varnish falsehood with a great deal of art. Had on, when he went away, a three cocked hat, with a blue

body coat, rather on the fade. He was seen in Bennington on Saturday last, disguised in a clean shirt. 1784

12

Humours

of

Bee redepomine Double Chin ANONYMOUS

P ARSON T: , when about fulfilling his design of preaching to the Susquehanna Indians, applied to an opulent merchant for a small sum of money to enable him to prosecute his undertaking. “Why, what do you intend to do among the copper gentry?” says the merchant. “Prepare for them,” says the Parson, “a place in the bosom of Abraham.” “And do you imagine,” says the merchant, “that father Abraham will thank you for filling his bosom with a pack of damned savages?” A gentlewoman loved a doctor of physic and, to enjoy him, feigned herself sick. The doctor being sent for in all haste, went up and staid with her an hour. When he came down, her husband asked him how she

did? “O,” says he, “she has had two such extreme fits, that if you had seen one of them, it would have broke your heart.” A fat parson, who had long dozed over his sermons in his pulpit and his beer in his parlour, happened one Sunday, after a plentiful crop of tithes, to exert himself mightily. Deeply impressed by his own discourse, he, for the first time, acknowledged to his spouse at supper that he was somewhat choleric, but that hereafter he was resolved to practice what he preached. “But now, my jewel,” says he, “let us refresh ourselves with a sip of the best.” The obedient wife, ravished by his good humour, flew to the cellar. But, alas! The barrel was staved and quite empty, by some accident. What should she do? Returning with despair in her eyes, “My dear,” she says, “what a sad accident has happened.” “I am sorry,” says the parson, “if anyone has met with misfortune. For my part, if it relate 13

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to me, I am resolved to bear it with Christian patience. But come, where’s the beer?” “Alack-a-day! That is the very thing! How it happened, I cannot understand, but it is all swimming on the ground.” The parson, flying into a violent passion, raved. “My life,” says she, “do but reflect upon your sermon. Think of the patience of Job.” “Job!” roared he. “Don’t talk to me of Job’s patience. Job never had a barrel of such beer!”

An arrogant Englishman passing through New-Jersey in a stage, entered into a lengthy detail in praise of the severity of British discipline, and observed as an instance, that two soldiers in Cornwallis’ army were hung merely for robbing a hen-roost. A Jerseyman in company, said it was a pity this discipline had not been enforced among Lord Howe’s men. when they invaded New-Jersey. “Why so?” says the Englishman. “Because, sir,” says the Jerseyman, “We should been happily rid of his lordship and his whole army together.” A young lady who had been lately married, and seeing her husband about to rise pretty early in the morning, says, “What, my dear? Are you getting up already? Pray lie a little longer and rest yourself.” “No,” replied he, “my dear, I must needs get up to rest myself.” Toasts Recommended

“Short shoes and long corns to the enemies of America.” “More friends and less need of them.” “May we kiss whom we please and please whom we kiss.” “Great men honest and honest men great.” “A head to earn and a heart to spend.” ADS)

‘The Indian Treaty Man Hucu

Henry

BRACKENRIDGE

Ar A certain inn on the Pennsylvania border, Captain Farrago was accosted by a stranger in the following manner: “Captain,” said he, “I have heard of a young man in your service who talks Irish. Now, sir, my business is that of an Indian treaty maker. I am on my way with a party of kings and half-kings to the Commissioners to

hold a treaty. My king of the Kickapoos, who was a Welsh blacksmith, took sick by the way and is dead. I have heard of this lad of yours and wish to have him a while to supply the Welshman’s place. The treatymaking will not last longer than a couple of weeks, and as the government will probably allow three or four thousand dollars for the treaty, it will be in our power to make it worth your while to spare your Irishman for that time.” “Your king of the Kickapoos?” said the Captain. “What does that mean?” Said the stranger, “It is just this. You have heard of the Indian nations to the westward that occasionally make war on the frontier settlements. It has been the policy of government to treat with these and distribute goods. Commissioners are appointed for that purpose. “Now, you are not to suppose that it is an easy matter to catch a real chief, and bring him from the woods. If, at some expense, one was brought, the goods and gifts would go to his use. It is much more profitable to hire substitutes and make chiefs of our own. And, as some unknown gibberish is necessary to pass for an Indian language, we generally make use of Welsh or Low Dutch or Irish. Here and there we pick up an ingenious fellow who can imitate a language by sounds of his own, but we prefer one who can speak a real tongue, and give more for him. “We cannot afford you a great deal at this time for the use of your i)

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man, because it is not a general treaty where twenty or thirty thousand dollars are appropriated by the Congress. It is an occasion, or what we call a running treaty, by way of holding fast friendship. The Commissioners will doubtless be glad to see us and procure from government an allowance for the treaty. For the more treaties, the more use for Commissioners. The business must be kept up, and treaties made, if there are none of themselves. “My Piankasha and Choctaw chiefs are very good fellows. The one of them is a Scotch peddler that talks the Gaelic. The other has been some time in Canada and has a little broken Indian, I know not of what lan-

guage. He has been of great service in teaching the rest some Indian customs and manners. I had the whole of them for the fortnight past learning war songs and dances and how to make responses at the treaty. “If your man is tractable, I can make him a Kickapoo in about nine days. A breech-clout and leggins that I took off the blacksmith that died I have ready to put on him. He must have part of his head shaved and painted, with feathers on his crown. But the paint will wear off and the hair will grow in a short time, so that he can go about with you again.” “It is a very strange affair,” said the Captain. “Is it possible that such deception can be practised in a new country? It astonishes me that the government does not detect such imposition. “The government,” said the Indian treaty man, “is at a great distance. It knows no more of Indians than a cow does of Greek. The Congress hears of wars and rumors of wars, and supports the executive in forming treaties. How is it possible for men who live remote from the scene of action to have adequate ideas of the nature of Indians or the transactions that are carried on in their behalf? Do you think that one-half of those savages that come to treat are real representatives of the nation? I speak of those particularly who come trading down to inland towns. I would not communicate these mysteries of our trade, were it not that I confide in your good sense, and have occasion for your servant.”

“It is a mystery of iniquity!” said the Captain. “Do you suppose that I would countenance such a fraud upon the public?” “I do not know,” said the other. “It is a very common thing for men to speculate nowadays. If you will not, another will. A hundred dollars might as well be in your pocket as another man’s. I will give you that for the use of your servant for a week or two, and say no more about it.” “Tt is a new idea to me entirely,” said the Captain, “that Indian princes whom I have seen escorted down as such were no more than trumpery.”

THE

INDIAN

TREATY

MAN

ee

7,

. Said the Indian treaty man, “These things are now reduced to a system. It is so well known to those who engage in the traffic that we think nothing POF it.” “How the devil,” said the Captain, “do you get speeches made and interpret them so as to pass for truth?” “That is an easy matter,” said the other. “Indian speeches are nearly all alike. You have only to talk of burying hatchets, kindling fires, and brightening chains of friendship, with a demand at the latter end of rum to get drunk on.” “I much doubt,” said the Captain, “if treaties that are carried on in

earnest are of any great use.” “OF none at all,” said the other, “especially as the practice of giving goods prevails. This is an inducement to fresh wars. This being the case, _ it can be no harm to make a farce of the whole matter; or rather a profit of it by such means as I have proposed to you, and have pursued myself.” “After all,” said the Captain, “I cannot but consider it as a kind of contraband and illicit trafic. I must be excused from having any hand in it. I shall not betray your secret, but I shall not favor it. It would ill become me, whose object in riding about in this manner, is to impart just ideas on all subjects, to share in such ill-gotten gain.” The Indian treaty man, finding it in vain to say more, withdrew. The Captain, apprehending that he might not yet drop his designs on the Irishman, but be tampering with him out of doors should he come across him, sent for Teague. Teague, coming in, said the Captain to him, “Teague, I have discovered

in you for some time past a great spirit of ambition which is, doubtless, commendable in a young person. I have checked it only in cases where there was real danger or apparent mischief. “There is now an opportunity of advancing yourself, not so much in the way of honor as of profit. But profit brings honor, and, indeed, is the most substantial support of it. There has been a man here with me that carries on a trade with the Indians. He tells me that redheaded scalps are in great demand with them. If you could spare yours, he would give a good price for it. I do not well know what use they make of this article. Probably they dress it with the hairy side out, and make tobacco pouches for the chiefs when they meet in council. It saves dyeing. Besides the natural red hair of a man may be superior, in their estimation, to any color they can give by art. “The taking off the scalp will not give much pain, it is so dexterously

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done with a crooked knife they have for that purpose. The mode of taking off the scalp is this: You lie down on your face. A warrior puts his feet upon your shoulders, collects your hair in his left hand, and drawing a circle with the knife in his left, makes the incision. With a sudden pull, he separates it from the scalp, giving in the meantime what is called the scalp yell. The thing is done in such an instant that the pain is scarcely felt. “He offered me a hundred dollars if I would have it taken off for his use. He gave me directions, in the meantime, how to stretch it and dry it

on a hoop. No! I told him it was a perquisite of your own, and you might dispose of it as you thought proper. If you choose to sell it, I have no objections, but the bargain should be of your own making, and the price such as should please yourself. It is probable that you may bring the price up by holding out a little. But I do not think it would be advisable to lose the bargain. A hundred dollars for a little hairy flesh is a great deal. You will trot a long time before you make that with me. “He will be with you probably to propose the purchase. You will know him when you see him. He is a tall man with leggins on, and has several Indians with him, going to a treaty. He talked to me something of making you a king of the Kickapoos, after the scalp is off. But I would not count on that so much, because words are but wind, and promises easily broken. I would advise you to make sure of the money in the first place, and take chance for the rest.” I have seen among the prints of Hogarth some such expression of countenance as that of Teague at this instant. As soon as he could speak, he began to intimate his disinclination to the traflic. ‘The hair of his scalp itself had risen in opposition to it. “Will ye throw me into ridicule?” said he. “Am I to be thrown like a dog to the savages and have the flesh torn off my head to give to these wild beasts to make a knapsack to carry their praties and things in, for an hundred dollars or the like? It shall never be said that the hair of the O’Regans made moccasins for a wild Indian to trot upon. I would sooner throw up my own head, hair and all, than give it to these people to smoke with out of their long pipes!” “If this be your determination,” said the Captain, “it will behoove you to keep yourself somewhat close. While we remain at this public house, avoid any conversation with the chapman or his agents, should they come to tamper with you. For it is not improbable, while they are keeping you in talk, proposing to make you a Kickapoo chief and the like, they may snatch the scalp off your head, and you not be the wiser for it.”

||

THE

INDIAN

TREATY

MAN

>

-

19

Teague thought the caution good, and resolving to abide by it, retired

to the kitchen. The maid at this time, happening to want a log of wood, requested

Teague to cut it for her. Taking the ax, accordingly, and going out, he was busy chopping with his head down. In the meantime, the Indian treaty man had returned with one in Indian dress, who was the chief of the Killinoos, or at least passed for such. He brought him as having some recruiting talents and might prevail with Teague to elope and join the company. “I suppose,” said the Indian treaty man, “you are the waiter of the Captain who lodges here at present?” Teague, hearing a man speak, and lifting up his head, saw the leggins on the one and the Indian dress on the other. With a kind of involuntary effort, he threw the ax directly from him at the Killinoo. It missed him, but about an inch, and fell behind.

Teague, raising a shout of desperation, was fixed on the spot. His locomotive faculties were suspended. He could neither retreat nor advance, like one enchained or enchanted for the moment. The king of the Killinoos drew his tomahawk and prepared for battle. The Captain, who was reading at the front window, hearing the shout, looked about and saw what was going on at the woodpile. “Stop, villain!” he said to the king of the Killinoos. “You are not to take

that scalp yet, however much you may value it. He will not take a hundred dollars for it, nor five hundred, though you make him a king of the Kickapoos or anything else. It is no trifling matter to have the ears slit in tatters and the nose run through with a bodkin, and a goose quill stuck across. So, you may go about your business—you will find no king of the Kickapoos here!” ; Under the cover of this address of the Captain, Teague had retired to the kitchen and had ensconced himself behind the rampart of the maid. The Indian treaty man and the Killinoo chief, finding the measure hopeless, withdrew, and turned their attention, it is to be supposed, to some other quarter to find a king of the Kickapoos, while the Captain, after paying his score at the inn, resumed his travels with Teague O’Regan. 1796

Jack and Gill A Scholarly Commentary JosepH

Amore

DENNIE

critical writers, it is a common

remark

that the

fashion of the times has often given a temporary reputation to performances of very little merit, and neglected those much more deserving of applause. I shall endeavor to introduce to the nation a work, which, though of considerable elegance, has been strangely overlooked by the generality of the world. It has, of late, fallen into disrepute, chiefly from the simplicity of its style, which in this age of luxurious refinement, is deemed only a secondary beauty, and from its being the favorite of the — young. I must acknowledge that at first I doubted in what class of poetry it should be arranged.

Its extreme

shortness,

and its uncommon

metre,

seemed to degrade it into a ballad, but its interesting subject, its unity of plan, and above all, its having a beginning, middle, and an end, decide

its claim to the epic rank. The opening is singularly beautiful:

Jack and Gill The first duty of the poet is to introduce his subject, and there is no part of poetry more difficult. Here our author is very happy: for instead

of telling us, as an ordinary writer would have done, who were the ancestors of Jack and Gill, that the grandfather of Jack was a respectable farmer, that his mother kept a tavern at the sign of the Blue Bear; and

that Gill’s father was a Justice of the Peace, he introduces them to us at once in their proper persons.

I cannot help accounting it, too, as a circumstance honorable to the 20

JACK

AND

JILL,

A SCHOLARLY

COMMENTARY

Seo

genius of the poet, that he does not in his opening call upon the Muse. This is an error into which Homer, and almost all the epic writers after him, have fallen; since by thus stating their case to the Muse, and desiring her to come to their assistance, they necessarily presuppose that she was absent, whereas there can be no surer sign of inspiration than for a muse to come unasked. The personages being now seen, their situation is next to be discovered. Of this we are immediately informed in the subsequent line, when we are told: | Jack and Gill Went up a hill. Here the imagery is distinct, yet the description concise. The poet meant to inform us that two persons were going up a hill. Had the poet told us how the two heroes went up, whether in a cart or a wagon, and

entered into the particulars which the subject involves, they would have been tedious, because superfluous. These considerations may furnish us with the means of deciding a controversy, arising from a variation in the manuscripts; some of which have it a hill, and others the hill. As the description is in no other part. local, I incline to the former reading. It has, indeed, been suggested that the hill here mentioned was Parnassus, and that the two persons are two poets, who, having overloaded Pegasus, the poor jaded creature was obliged to stop at the foot of the hill, whilst they ascended for water to recruit him. This interpretation, it is true, derives some countenance from the consideration that Jack and Gill were, in reality, as will appear in the course of the poem, going to draw water, and that there was on Parnassus such a place as Hippocrene, that is, a horsepond, at the top; but, on the whole, I think the text, as I have adopted it, to be the better reading. Having ascertained the names and conditions of the parties, the reader naturally becomes inquisitive into their employment, and wishes to know whether their occupation is worthy of them. Jack and Gill Went up a hill To fetch a bucket of water. Here we behold the plan gradually unfolding. We now discover their object, which we were before left to conjecture. Our acute author, instead of introducing a host of gods and goddesses, who might have impeded the journey of his heroes, by the intervention of the bucket, which is, as it

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ought to be, simple and conducive to the progress of the poem, has considerably improved on the ancient plan. It has been objected that the employment of John and Gill is not sufhciently dignified for an epic poem; but, in answer to this, it must be remarked that it was the opinion of Socrates, and many other philosophers, that beauty should be estimated by utility, and surely the purpose of the heroes must have been beneficial. They ascended the rugged mountain to draw water, and drawing water is certainly more conducive to human happiness than drawing blood, as do the boasted heroes of the Iliad, or roving on the ocean and invading other men’s property, as did the pious Aeneas. Yes, they went to draw water. It might have been drawn for the purpose of culinary consumption; it might have been to quench the thirst of the harmless animals who relied upon them for support; it might have been to feed a sterile soil, and to revive the drooping plants, which they raised by their labors. Is not our author more judicious than Appollonius, who chooses for the heroes of his Argonautics a set of rascals, undertaking to steal a sheep skin? Do we not find the amiable Rebecca busy at the well? Does not one of the maidens in the Odyssey delight us by her diligence in the same situation? : But the descriptive part is now finished, and the author hastens to the catastrophe. At what part of the mountain the well was situated, what was the reason of the sad misfortune, or how the prudence of Jack forsook him, we are not informed, but so, alas! it happened:

Jack fell down— Unfortunate John, at the moment when he was nimbly, for aught we know, going up the hill, perhaps at the moment when his toils were to cease, he made an heedless step, his centre of gravity fell beyond his base, and he tumbled. Buoyed by hope, we suppose his affliction not quite remediless, that his fall is an accident to which the wayfarers of this life are daily liable, and we anticipate his immediate rise to resume his labors. But:

Jack fell down And broke his crown—

Nothing now remains but to deplore the fate of the unhappy John. The mention of the crown has much perplexed the commentators. The learned Microphilus, in the 513th page of his “Cursory Remarks” on the poem, thinks he can find in it some illusion to the story of Alfred, who,

JACK

AND

JILL,

A

SCHOLARLY

COMMENTARY

e

SPFe

he says, is known to have lived, during his concealment, in a mountainous country, and as he watched the cakes on the fire, might have been sent to bring water. But Microphilus’ acute annotator, Vandergruten, has detected the fallacy of such a supposition, though he falls into an equal error in remarking that Jack might have carried a crown or a half crownpiece in his hand, which was fractured in the fall. My learned readers will doubtless agree with me in conjecturing that, as the crown is often used metaphorically for the head, and as that part is, or without any disparagement to the unfortunate sufferer, might have been, the heaviest, it was really his pericranium that sustained the damage. Having seen the fate of John, we are anxious to know that of his companion. Alas! And Gill came tumbling after. Here the distress thickens on us. Unable to support the loss of his friend, he followed him, determined to share his disaster, and resolved

that, as they had gone up together, they should not be separated as they came down. In the midst of our afflictions, let us not, however, be unmindful of the poet’s merit, which, on this occasion, is conspicuous. He evidently seems to have in view the excellent observation of Adam Smith, that our sym-

pathy arises not from a view of the passion, but of the situation that excites it. Instead of unnecessary lamentation, he gives us the real state of the case; avoiding at the same time that minuteness of detail, which is

so common among pathetic poets, and which, by dividing a passion and tearing it to rags, as Shakespeare says, destroys its force. Of the bucket, we are told nothing, but it is probable that it fell with its supporters.

Let us conclude with a review of the poem’s most prominent beauties. The subject is the fall of man. The heroes are men who did not commit a single fault, and whose misfortunes are to be imputed, not to indiscretion, but to destiny. The poet prudently clipped the wings of imagination, and repressed the extravagance of metaphorical decoration. All is simple, plain, consistent. That part, too, without which poetry is useless sound, the moral, has not escaped the view of the poet. When we behold two young men, who but a short moment before stood up in all the pride of health, falling down a hill, how must we lament the instability of all things. 1801

Family Portraits from Cockloft Hall Wasuincton

Irvine

and James

KitrxE PAULDING

Peon time immemorial, it has been the rule of the Cocklofts

to marry one of their own name. Every person of the least observation and experience must have observed that where this practice of marrying cousins and second cousins prevails in a family, every member in the course of a few generations becomes queer and original; as much

dis-

tinguished from the common race as if he was of a different species. This has happened in our family, and particularly in that branch of it of which Mr. Christopher Cockloft, or, to do him justice, Mr. Christopher Cockloft, Esq., is the head. Our family is of great antiquity, if there be any truth in the genealogical tree which hangs in my cousin’s library. They trace their descent from a celebrated Roman knight, cousin to the progenitor of his majesty of Britain, who left his country on occasion of some disgust, and coming into Wales became a favorite of Prince Madoc, and accompanied that famous Argonaut in the voyage which ended in the discovery of America. I have sometimes ventured to doubt the authenticity of this portion of the annals, to the great vexation of Cousin Christopher who, though as orthodox as a bishop, would sooner give up ine whole decalogue than lop off a single limb of the family tree. II

COCKLOFT

HALL is the country residence of the family, or rather the

paternal mansion. It is pleasantly situated on the banks of the Passaic, a sweet pastoral stream; not so near New York as to invite an inundation of idle acquaintance, who come to lounge away an afternoon, nor so distant as to render it an absolute deed of charity or friendship to perform the journey.

24

_. FAMILY

PORTRAITS

FROM

COCKLOFT

HALL

eS

It is one of the oldest habitations in the country, and was built by our grandfather, Lemuel Cockloft, to form, as the old gentleman expressed himself, “a snug retreat where he meant to sit himself down in his old days, and be comfortable for the rest of his life.” He was at this time a few years over fourscore; but this was a common saying of his, with which

he usually closed his airy speculations. One would have thought, from the long vista of years through which he contemplated many of his projects, that the old man had forgot the age of the patriarchs had long since gone by. He was for a considerable time in doubt on the question of roofing his house with shingles or slates; shingles would not last above thirty years! but they were cheaper than slates. He settled the matter by a kind of compromise, and determined to build with shingles first; “and when they are worn out,” said the old gentleman triumphantly, “’Twill be time

enough to replace them with more durable materials.” But his contemplated improvements surpassed everything; and scarcely had he a roof over his head, when he discovered a thousand things to be arranged before he could “sit down comfortably.” In the first place, every tree and bush on the place was cut down or grubbed up by the roots, because they were not placed to his mind; and a vast quantity of oaks, chestnuts, and elms set out in clumps, and rows, and labyrinths, which, he observed, in about five-and-twenty or thirty years at most would yield a very tolerable shade, and, moreover, would shut out all the surrounding country; for he was determined, he said, “to have all his views on his own

land and be beholden to no man for a prospect!” Another notion of the old gentleman was to blow up a bed of rocks for the purpose of having a fish pond, although the Passaic River ran at

about one hundred yards distance from the house, and was well stored with fish; but there was nothing, he said, like having things to one’s self. So, on he went, and as his views enlarged, he would have a summer

house built on the margin of the fish pond; he would have it surrounded with elms and willows; and he would have a cellar built under it for some

incomprehensible reason, which remains a secret to this day. “In a few years,” he observed, “it would be a delightful piece of wood and water, where he might ramble on a summer’s noon, smoke his pipe, and enjoy himself in his old days.” Thrice honest old soul!—he died of an apoplexy in his ninetieth year. Let no one ridicule the whim-whams of my grandfather. If—and of this

there is no doubt, for wise men have said it—if life be but a dream, happy is he who can make the most of the illusion! Though my grandfather is long since dead, the family has continued

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to glory in observing the golden rules of hospitality, which, according to the Cockloft principle, consists in giving a guest the freedom of the house, cramming him with beef and pudding, and, if possible, laying him under the table with prime port, claret, or London particular. The mansion appears to have been consecrated to the jolly god, and teems with monuments sacred to conviviality. Every chest of drawers, clothes-press, and cabinet is decorated with enormous China punch bowls, which Mrs. Christopher Cockloft has paraded with much ostentation, particularly in her favorite red damask bed chamber. The Cocklofts especially pride themselves upon the possession of several family portraits, which exhibit as honest a set of square, portly, wellfed looking gentlemen and gentlewomen as ever grew and flourished under the pencil of a Dutch painter. Old Christopher, who is a complete genealogist, has a story to tell of each, and dilates with copious eloquence on the great services of the general in large sleeves, during the old French war; and on the piety of the lady in blue velvet, who so attentively peruses her book, and was once so celebrated for a beautiful arm.

In the grand parlor, the mantel-piece is decorated with little lacquered earthen shepherdesses; some of which are without toes, and others with-

out noses; and the fire-place is garnished out with Dutch tiles, exhibiting a great variety of Scripture pieces, which my good soul of a cousin takes infinite delight in explaining. Poor Pindar Cockloft hates them as. he does poison; for, while a younker, he was obliged by his mother to learn the history of a tile every Sunday morning before she would permit him to join his playmates. This was a terrible affair for Pindar, who, by the time he had learned the last, had forgotten the first, and was obliged to

begin again. He assured me the other day, with a round college oath, that if the old house stood out till he inherited, he would have these tiles

taken out, and ground into powder. Cousin Christopher and his good wife have profound veneration for antique furniture; in consequence of which the old hall is furnished with old-fashioned

bedsteads,

with

high testers;

massy

clothes-presses,

standing most majestically on eagles’ claws, and ornamented with a profusion of shining brass handles, clasps, and hinges; and around the grand parlor are solemnly arranged a set of high-backed, leather-bottomed, massy mahogany chairs that always remind me of the formal long-waisted belles, who flourished in stays and buckram. They are of such unwieldy proportions that it is quite a serious undertaking to gallant one of them across the room, and sometimes they make a most equivocal noise when you sit down in a hurry.

FAMILY

PORTRAITS

FROM

COCKLOFT

HALL

Bey7/

The propensity to save everything that bears the stamp of family antiquity has accumulated an abundance of trumpery and rubbish with which the hall is encumbered from the cellar to the garret. Every room, and closet, and corner is crammed with three-legged chairs, clocks without hands, swords without scabbards, cocked hats, broken candlesticks,

and looking glasses with frames carved into fantastic shapes of feathered sheep, woolly birds, and other animals that have no names except in books of heraldry. Several spirited attempts have’ been made by the Misses Cockloft to introduce modern furniture into the Hall, but with very indifferent success. Modern style has always been an object of great annoyance to honest Christopher, and is ever treated by him with sovereign contempt, as an upstart intruder. It is a common observation of his, that your oldfashioned, substantial furniture bespeaks the respectability of one’s ancestors, and indicates that the family has been used to hold up its head for more than the present generation; whereas the fragile appendages of the modern style seem to be emblems of the mushroom gentility, and, to his mind, predicted that the family will molder away and vanish with its transient finery. The same whim makes him averse to having his house surrounded with poplars; which he stigmatizes as mere upstarts, just fit to ornament the shingle palaces of modern gentry, and characteristic of the establishments they decorate. Indeed, so far does he carry his veneration

for antique trumpery, that he can scarcely see the dust brushed from its resting place on the old-fashioned testers, or a grey-bearded spider dislodged from its ancient inheritance, without groaning; and I once saw him in a transport of passion on Pindar’s knocking down a moldering martincoop with his tennis ball, which had been set up in the latter days of my grandfather. In their attachment for everything that has remained long in the family, the Cocklofts are bigoted toward their old edifice, and I dare say would sooner have it crumble about their ears than abandon it. The consequence is, it has been so patched up ‘and repaired that it has become as full of whims and oddities as its tenants; requires to be nursed and humored like

a gouty old codger of an alderman, and reminds one of the famous ship in which a certain admiral circumnavigated the globe, which was so patched and timbered that at length not a particle of the original remained. Whenever the wind blows, the old mansion makes a most perilous groaning; and every storm is sure to make a day’s work for the carpenter, who attends upon it as regularly as the family physician. This predilection for everything that has long family attachment shows

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itself in every particular. The family carriage was made in the last French war, and the old horses were most indubitably foaled in Noah’s ark. ‘The domestics are all grown grey in the service of our house. We have a little, old, crusty, grey-headed negro, Caesar, who has lived through two or three generations of the Cocklofts, and of course has become a personage of no little importance in the household. He calls all the family by their Christian names, and is a complete Cockloft chronicle for the last seventy years. There is scarce a little hamlet but has one of these weather-beaten wiseacres of negroes, who ranks among the great characters of the place. He is always resorted to as an oracle to resolve any question about the weather, shooting, fishing, farming, and horse-doctoring; and on such occasions will slouch his remnant of a hat on one side, fold his arms, roll his white eyes,

and examine the sky, with a look as knowing as a magpie looking into a marrow bone. Such a knowing one is old Caesar, who acts as Cousin Cockloft’s prime minister or grand vizier; assumes, when abroad, his master’s style and title; to wit, Squire Cockloft; and is, in effect, absolute

lord and ruler of the soil. To let my readers into a family secret, Cousin Christopher is notoriously henpecked by the old negro. Caesar was a bosom friend and chosen playmate of Cousin Pindar and myself, when we were boys. Never were we so happy as when, stealing away on a holiday to the Hall, we ranged about the fields with him. He was particularly adroit in making our quail-traps and fishing rods; was always the ringleader in all the schemes of frolicsome mischief perpetrated by the urchins of the neighborhood; and SUES es himself on an equality with the best of us. Many a summer evening do I remember when, huddled together on the steps of the Hall door, Caesar, with his stories of ghosts, goblins, and

witches, would put us in a panic, and people every lane, and churchyard, and solitary wood with imaginary beings. In process of time, he became the constant attendant and Man Friday of Cousin Pindar, whenever he went a sparking among the rosy country girls of the neighboring farms; and brought up his rear at every rustic dance, when he would mingle in the sable group that always thronged the door of merriment; and it was enough to put to the rout a host of splenetic imps to see his mouth gradually dilate from ear to ear, with pride and exultation, at seeing how neatly Pindar footed it over the floor. Caesar was likewise the chosen confidant and special agent of Pindar in all his love affairs, until, as his evil stars would have it, on his being

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intrusted with the delivery of a poetic billet-doux to one of his patron’s sweethearts, he took an unlucky notion to send it to his own mistress,

who, not being able to read, took it to her lady; and so the whole affair was blown. Pindar was universally roasted, and Caesar was discharged forever from his confidence. Poor Caesar!—he has grown old, but he still remembers old times; and will, now and then, remind me of them as he lights me to my room, and

lingers a little while to bid me good night. The honest, simple old creature has a warm corner in my heart. I don’t see, for my part, why a body may not like a negro as well as a white man. iI

My COUSIN CHRISTOPHER enjoys unlimited authority in the mansion of his forefathers; he is truly what may be termed a hearty old blade; has a florid, sunshine countenance; and if you will only praise his wine and laugh at his long stories, himself and his house are heartily at your service. The first condition is, indeed, easily complied with. To tell the truth, his wine is excellent; but his stories are not of the best, and often repeated, are apt to create a disposition to yawn. When he enters upon one of his stories, it reminds me of Newark Causeway, where the traveller sees the end at a distance of several miles. To the great misfortune of all his acquaintances, Squire Cockloft can give the day and date, and name, and age, and circumstance with the most unfeeling precision. These, however, are but trivial foibles, forgotten, or remembered only with a kind of tender, respectful pity by those who know with what a rich, abundant harvest of kindness and generosity his heart is stored.

It would delight you to see with what social gladness he welcomes a visitor into his house; and the poorest man that enters his door never leaves without a cordial invitation to sit down and drink a glass of wine. By the honest farmers round his country-seat he is looked up to with love and reverence; they never pass him by without his inquiring after the welfare of their families, and receiving a cordial shake of his hand. There are but two classes of people who are thrown out of the reach of his hospitality, and these are democrats, a prejudice partly owing to a little vivid spark of Toryism which burns in a secret corner of his heart; and Frenchmen; for he still cherishes the sad memory of my good Aunt Charity—who died of a Frenchman, as shall later be told. The old gentleman considers it treason against the majesty of good

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breeding to speak to any visitor with his hat on; but the moment a democrat enters his door, he forthwith bids his man, Caesar, bring his hat, puts it on his head, and salutes the visitor with an appalling, “Well, sir, what do you want of me?” He was a loyal subject of the Crown, had hardly recovered the shock of independence; and, though he does not care to own it, always does honor to His Majesty's birthday by inviting a few cavaliers, like himself, to dinner, and gracing his table with more than ordinary festivity. If by chance the Revolution is mentioned before him, my cousin shakes his head; and you may see, if you take good note, a lurking smile of contempt in the corner of his eye which marks a decided disapprobation of the sound. He once, in the fullness of his heart, observed to me “that green peas were a month later than they were under the old government!” I remember a few months ago the old gentleman came home in quite a squall; kicked the poor mastiff out of his way, as he came through the hall; threw his hat on the table with most violent emphasis, and pulling out his box, took three huge pinches of snuff, and threw a fourth into the cat’s eyes as he sat purring at the fireside. This was enough to set the body politic going; Mrs. Cockloft began “my dearing” it as fast as tongue could move; the young ladies took each a stand at an elbow of his chair; the servants came tumbling in; the mastiff put up an inquiring nose; and even Grimalkin, after he had cleaned his whiskers and finished sneezing, discovered indubitable signs of sympathy. After the most affectionate inquiries on all sides, it turned out that my cousin, in crossing the street, had got his silk stockings bespattered with mud by a coach, which it seems, belonged to a dashing gentleman who had formerly supplied the family with hot rolls and muffins when they visited the city! Mrs. Cockloft thereupon turned up her eyes, and the young ladies their noses; and it would have edified a whole congregation to hear the conversation which took place concerning the insolence of upstarts, and the vulgarity of would-be gentlemen and ladies, who strive to emerge from low life by dashing about in carriages. An object of the peculiar affection of Cousin Christopher is an old English cherry tree, which leans against the corner of the Hall; and whether the house supports it, or it supports the house, would be, I believe, a question of some difficulty to decide. It is held sacred by old Christopher

because he planted it and reared it himself, and had once well-nigh broken his neck by a fall from one of its branches. This is one of his favorite stories, and there is reason to believe, that if the tree was out of

the way, the old gentleman would forget the whole affair—which would

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eke

be a great pity. The old tree has long since ceased bearing, and is exceedingly infirm; every tempest robs it of a limb; and one would suppose from the lamentations of Cousin Christopher on such occasions that he had lost one of his own. He often pontemplstcs it in a half-melancholy, halfmoralizing humor—‘“Together,” he says, “we have flourished, and together we shall wither away; a few years, and both our heads shall be laid low, and, perhaps, my moldering bones may, one day, mingle with the dust of the tree I have planted.” At one time the old tree had obtruded a withered branch before Miss Barbara

Cockloft’s window,

and she desired her father to order the

gardener to saw it off. I shall never forget the old man’s answer, and the look that accompanied it. “What,” cried he, “lop off the limbs of my cherry tree in its old age? Why do you not cut off the grey locks of your poor old father?” IV

As I have previously mentioned MRS. COCKLOFT, I might as well say a little more about her and my cousins, while I am in the humor.

She is a lady of wonderful

nobility,

a warm

admirer of shining

mahogany, clean hearths, and her husband; who she considers the wisest

man in the world, bating the parson of our parish, who is her oracle on all - occasions. She goes constantly to church every Sunday and Saint’s-day; and inists upon it that no man is entitled to ascend a pulpit unless he has been ordained by a bishop. Nay, so far does she carry her orthodoxy that all the argument in the world will never persuade her that a Presbyterian or Baptist, or even a Calvinist, has any possible chance of going to heaven. To sum up all her qualifications in the shortest possible way, Mrs. Cockloft is, in the true sense of the phrase, a good sort of woman. The Misses Cockloft, whose pardon I crave for not having particularly introduced them before, are a pair of delectable damsels, who, having

purloined and locked up the family Bible, pass for just what age they please to plead guilty to. BARBARA, the eldest, has long since resigned the character of a belle,

and adopted that staid, sober, demure, snuff-taking air becoming her years and discretion. She is a good-natured soul, whom I never saw in a passion but once, and that was occasioned by seeing an old favorite beau of hers kiss the hand of a blooming girl; and, in truth, she only got angry because, as she very properly said, “it was spoiling the child.” Her sister, MARGERY or MAGGIE as she is familiarly termed, seemed a

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disposed to maintain her post as a belle, until a few months since; when accidentally hearing a gentleman observe that she broke very fast, she suddenly left off going to assembly, took a cat into high favor, and began to rail at the forward pertness of the young misses. The young ladies are still visited by some half dozen of veteran beaux, who grew and flourished when the Misses Cockloft were quite children;

but have been brushed rather rudely by the hand of time, who, to say the truth, can do almost anything but make people young. They are, notwithstanding, still warm candidates for female favor; look venerably tender, and repeat over and over the same honeyed speeches and sugared sentiments to the little belles that they poured so profusely into the ears of their mothers. My Cousin PINDAR Cockloft is one of the family’s most conspicuous members. He is now in his fifty-eighth year—is a bachelor, partly through chance, and an oddity of the first water. Half his life has been employed in writing odes, sonnets, epigrams, and elegies, which he seldom shows to

anybody but myself after they are written; and all the old chests, drawers, and chair bottoms in the house teem with his productions. : In his younger days he figured as a dashing blade in the great world; and no young fellow of New York ‘Town wore a longer pig tail, or carried more buckram in his skirts. From sixteen to thirty, he was continually in love, and during that period, to use his own words, he be-scribbled more paper than would serve the theatre for snow storms a whole season. Though he still loves the company of the ladies, he has never been known to exceed the bounds of courtesy in his intercourse with them; for, in his own rhyme: “Though jogging down the hill of life, “Without the comfort of a wife;

“And though I ne’er a helpmate chose, “To stock my house and mend my hose; “Still do I love the gentle sex, “And still with cares my brain perplex, “To keep the fair ones of the age “Unsullied as the spotless page; “All pure, all simple, all refined, “The sweetest solace of mankind.” Pindar was the life and ornament of our family in town, until the epoch

of the French Revolution, which sent so many unfortunate dancing masters from their country to polish and enlighten our hemisphere. This

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_was a sad time for Pindar, who had taken a genuine Cockloft prejudice against everything French, ever since he was brought to death’s door by a ragout. The Marseilles Hymn had much the same effect upon him that sharpening a knife on a dry whetstone has upon some people—it set his teeth chattering. He packed up his trunk, his old-fashioned writing desk,

and his Chinese ink stand, and made a kind of growling retreat to Cockloft Hall, where he has resided ever since.

|

Vv

My AUNT CHARITY departed this life in the fifty-ninth year of her age, though she never grew older after twenty-five. In her teens she was, according to her own account, a celebrated beauty, though I never could meet with anybody that remembered when she was handsome. In the good old days that saw my aunt in the heydey of youth, a fine lady was a most formidable animal, and required to be approached with the same awe and devotion that a Tartar feels in the presence of his Grand Lama. If a gentleman offered to take her hand, except to help her into a carriage, or lead her into a drawing room, such frowns! such a rustling of brocade and taffeta! her very paste shoe buckles sparkled with indignation, and for a moment assumed the brilliancy of diamonds: in those days the person of a belle was sacred; it was unprofaned by the sacrilegious grasp of a stranger —simple souls!—they had not the waltz among them yet! My good aunt prided herself on keeping up this buckram delicacy; and if she happened to be playing at the old fashioned game of forfeits, and was fined a kiss, it was always more trouble to get it than it was worth; for she made a most gallant defence, and never surrendered until she saw her adversary inclined to give over the attack. Once, when on a sleighing party, when they came to the Kissing Bridge, her swain attempted to levy contributions on Miss Charity Cockloft, who after squalling at a hideous rate, at length jumped out of the sleigh plump into. a snow bank, where she stuck fast, until he came to her rescue. This Latonian feat cost her a rheumatism, from which she never thoroughly

recovered. It is rather singular that my aunt, though a great beauty, and an heiress withal, never got married. ‘This much is certain, that for many years previous to her decease, she declined all attentions from the gentlemen, and contented herself with watching over the welfare of her fellow creatures. She was indeed observed to take a considerable lean toward Methodism,

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was frequent in her attendance at love feasts, read Whitefield and Wesley, and even went so far as to travel the distance of five-and-twenty miles to be present at a camp meeting.

This gave great offence to my Cousin Christopher, and his good lady, who, as I have already mentioned, are rigidly orthodox in the Established Church. Had my Aunt Charity not been of a most pacific disposition, her religious whim would have occasioned many a family altercation. She was indeed as good a soul as the Cockloft family ever boasted; a lady of unbounded loving-kindness, which extended to man, woman, and child. Was any acquaintance sick? In vain did the wind whistle and the storm beat; my aunt would waddle through mud and mire, over the whole section, but what she would visit them. She would sit by them for hours together with the most persevering patience, and tell a thousand melancholy stories _ of human misery, to keep up their spirits. The whole catalogue of yerb teas was at her fingers’ ends, from formidable wormwood down to gentle balm; and she would descant by the hour on the healing qualities of hoarhound, catnip, and penny royal. Woe be to the patient that came under the benevolent hand of my Aunt Charity; he was sure, willy-nilly, to be drenched with a deluge of concoctions; and full many a time has my Cousin Christopher borne a twinge of pain in silence, through fear of being condemned to suffer the martyrdom of her materia medica. But the truth must be told. With all her good qualities, my Aunt Charity was afflicted with one fault, extremely rare among her gentle sex —it was curiosity. How she came by it, I am at a loss to imagine, but it played the very vengeance with her and destroyed the comfort of her life. Having an invincible desire to know everybody’s character, business, and mode of living, she took up her residence in town, and was forever prying into the affairs of her neighbors; and got a great deal of ill will from people toward whom she had the kindest disposition possible. If any family on the opposite of the street gave a dinner, my aunt would mount her spectacles, and sit at the window until the company were all housed, merely that she might know who they were. If she heard a story about any of her acquaintance, she would, forthwith, set off, full sail, and never rest until, to use her usual expression, she had got “to

the bottom of it;” which meant nothing more than telling it to everybody she knew. I remember one night my Aunt Charity happened to hear a most precious story about one of her good friends, but unfortunately too late to give it immediate circulation, It made her absolutely miserable; and

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she hardly slept a wink all night, for fear her bosom friend, Mrs. Sipkins, should get the start of her in the moming. You must know there was always a contest between these two ladies, who should first give currency to the good-natured things said about everybody; and this unfortunate rivalship at length proved fatal to their long and ardent friendship. My aunt got up full two hours that morning before her usual time; put on her pompadour taffeta gown, and sallied forth to lament the misfortune of her dear friend. Would you believe it!—wherever she went, Mrs. Sipkins had anticipated her; and, instead of being listened to with uplifted hands and open-mouthed wonder, my unhappy aunt was obliged to sit quietly and listen to the whole affair, with numerous additions, alterations, and amendments! Now, this was too bad; it would have

_provoked Patience Grizzle or a saint. It was too much for my aunt, who kept her bed for three days afterward, with a cold; but I have no doubt

it was owing to this affair of Mrs. Sipkins, to whom she would never be reconciled. But I pass over the rest of my Aunt Charity’s life, chequered with the various calamities, and misfortunes, and mortifications, incident to those

worthy old gentlewomen who have the domestic cares of the whole community upon their minds. I hasten to relate the melancholy incident that hurried her out of existence in the full bloom of antiquated virginity. In their frolicsome malice, the fates had ordained that a French boarding house, or Pension Frangaise, as it was called, should be established

directly opposite my aunt’s residence. Cruel event!—it threw her into that alarming disorder denominated the fidgets; she did nothing but watch at the window day after day, but without becoming one whit the wiser at the end of a fortnight. She wondered why there was always such a scraping of fiddles in the parlor, and such a smell of onions from the kitchen; in short, neighbor Pension was continually uppermost in her thoughts, and incessantly on the outer edge of her tongue. This was, I believe, the first time she had ever failed “to get at the bottom of a thing;” and the disappointment cost her many a sleepless night, I warrant you. I have little doubt, however, that my aunt would have ferreted neighbor Pension out, could she have spoken or understood French; but in those times people in general could make themselves understood in plain English; and it was always a standing rule in the Cockloft family, which exists to this day, that not one of the females should learn French. My Aunt Charity had lived for some time at her window in vain; when one day as she was keeping her usual look-out, and suffering all the pangs

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itST “h h An pa

of unsatisfied curiosity, she beheld a little, meagre, weazel-faced French-

a

cocked hat; he seemed to shake in the wind, and every blast that went over him whistled through his bones and threatened instant annihilation.



man, of the most forlorn, pitiful, and diminutive proportions, arrive at — neighbor Pension’s door. He was dressed in white, with a little pinched-up yi

This embodied spirit of famine was followed by three carts, lumbered _

with crazy trunks, chests, band boxes, bidets, medicine chests, parrots and monkeys; and at his heels ran a yelping pack of little black-nosed pug — dogs. This was the thing wanting to fill up the measure of my Aunt Charity’s affliction. She could not conceive, for the soul of her, who this mysterious

little apparition could be that made so great a display; what he could possibly do with so much baggage, and particularly with his parrots and monkeys; or how so small a carcass could have occasion for so — many trunks of clothes. From the time of this fatal arrival, my poor aunt was in a quandary. All her inquiries were fruitless; no one could expound. the history of this mysterious stranger. She never held up her head afterward—drooped daily, took to her bed in a fortnight, and in one little month I saw her

quietly deposited in the family paate —dead of a Frenchman! as the family ever afterward said. VI

The last time I saw my UNCLE JOHN was fifteen years ago, when I paid him a visit at the old mansion. I found him reading a newspaper— for it was election time, and he was always a warm Federalist; and had made several converts to the true faith in his time; particularly one old tenant of his who always, just before the election, became a violent antiFederalist in order that he might be convinced of his errors by my uncle, who never failed to reward his conviction by some substantial benefit. All his life Uncle John had been trying to get married, and always thought himself on the point of accomplishing his wishes. His disappointments were not owing either to the deformity of his mind or person; for in his youth he was reckoned handsome, and I myself can witness for him that he had as kind a heart as ever was fashioned; neither were they

owing to his poverty—which sometimes stands in an honest man’s way— for he was born with the inheritance of a small estate which was sufficient to establish his claim to the title of “one well to do in the world.”

The truth is, my uncle had a prodigious antipathy to doing things in a

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tions to miss each other, but the second time they tacked across the pavement—drifting-like, diagonal—they come together, down by the curb— al-mighty soggy, they did—which staggered ’em a moment, and then over they went into the gutter. Smith was up first, and he made a dive for a

cobble and fell on Jones. Jones dug out and made a dive for a cobble, and slipped his hold and jammed his head into Smith’s stomach. They each done that over again, twice more, just the same way. After that, neither

of ’em could get up any more, and so they just laid there in the slush and clawed mud and cussed each other.” On the cross examination, the witness could not say whether the parties continued to fight afterward in the saloon or not—he only knew they began it in the gutter, and to the best of his knowledge and belief they were too drunk tc get into a saloon, and too drunk to stay in it after they got there. As to weapons, he saw none used except the cobble stones, and to the best of his knowledge and belief, they missed fire every time while he was present. Jeremiah Driscoll came forward, was sworn, and testified, “I saw the

fight, your Honor, and it wasn’t in a saloon nor in the street. It was up in the Square, and they fought with a pine bench and a cane—” Lawyer.—‘“There,

there, there—that

will do—that—will—do!

Take

the witness.” The testimony on the cross examination went to show that during the fight one of the parties drew a sling-shot and cocked it and at the same time the other discharged a hand-grenade at his antagonist. He could not say, however, which drew the sling-shot or which

threw the grenade.

Upon questioning him further, and confronting him with the parties to the case before the court, it transpired that the faces of Jones and Smith were unknown to him, and that he had been talking about an entirely

different fight all the time. Other witnesses were examined, some of whom swore that Smith was

the aggressor, and others that Jones began the row. Some said they fought with their fists, others that they fought with knives, others tomahawks, others revolvers, others clubs, others axes, others beer mugs and chairs,

and others swore that there had been no fight at all. However, fight or no fight, the testimony was straightforward and uniform on one point, at any rate, and that was that the fuss was about two dollars and forty cents, which one party owed the other, but it was impossible to find out which was the debtor and which the creditor. After the witnesses had all been heard, his honor, Judge Sheperd,

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observed that the evidence in this case resembled the evidence before him in some thirty-five cases every day, on an average. He then said he would continue the case, to afford the parties an opportunity of procuring more testimony.

I have been keeping an eye on the Police Court for the last few days, and I have arrived at the conclusion that the office of Police Judge is a profitable and comfortable thing to have, but then, it has its little drawbacks. Hearing testimony must be worrying to a Police Judge sometimes, when he is in his right mind. I would rather be secretary to a wealthy mining company, and have nothing to do but advertise the assessments and collect them in carefully, and go along quiet and upright, and be one of the noblest works of God, and never gobble a dollar that didn’t belong to me—all just as those fellows do, you know. (Oh, I have no talent for

sarcasm, it isn’t likely!) But I trespass. Now, with every confidence in the instinctive candor and fair dealing of my race, I leave the accused and the accuser in the case of Smith vs. Jones before the bar of the world. Let their fate be pronounced. The decision will be a holy and just one. 1864

Dehorning the Dilemma ANONYMOUS

IN Norfolk there was a religious society called “Perfectionists,” and some ten or twelve of them addressed a letter to the Commanding General of that department, setting forth their objections to swearing allegiance to any earthly government. The subject was disposed of by Gen. Butler in the following characteristic manner:

HEADQUARTERS OF EIGHTEENTH ARMY CORPS, FORT MONROE, VA., JANUARY 13, 1864. J. F. Dozier, E. H. Beaseley, and others: GENTLEMEN: I have read your petition to Gen. Barnes, setting forth , your objections to swearing allegiance to any earthly government. The first reason which you set forth is that “all human governments are a necessary evil, and are continued in existence only by the permission of Jehovah until the time arrives for the establishment of his kingdom, and in the establishment of which all others will be subdued unto it, thus ful-

filling that declaration in the eighth of Daniel, fourteenth verse,” &c. You therein establish to your own satisfaction three points: First. That government, although an evil, is a necessary one. Second. That for a time it is permitted to exist by the wisdom of Jehovah. Third. That the time at which a period is to be put to its existence is not come.

Therefore, you ought to swear allegiance to the government of the United States: First. Because, though an evil, you admit it to be necessary. Second. Although an evil, you admit that it is permitted by the wisdom of Jehovah, and that it is not for his creatures to question the wisdom of his acts. 283

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Third. You only claim to be excused when Jehovah’s government is substituted, which period, you admit, has not yet arrived. Your obedient servant,

Benj. F, Butler. 1864

Petroleum V. Nasby Attempts to Draw the Color Line Davip

Ross

Locxs

POST OFFIS, CONFEDRIT X ROADS Cwich is in the Stait uv Kentucky), November 25, 1867.

I hev bin in the Apossel biznis more extensively than any man sence the time uv Paul. First I established a church uv Democrats in a little oasis I diskivered in the Abolition Stait of Ohio, to wit, at Wingert’s Corners,

where there wuz four saloons, but nary church or school house within four miles, and whose populashen wuz unanimously Democratic, the saloon-keepers havin mortgages on all the land around em—but alars! I wuz forced to leeve it after the election uv the Tyrant Linkin. It come about this way. When the war come up and South Carliny and several other uv the trooly Democratic staits seceshed, it looked awful dim for sech of us Northern Democrats as had always bin troo-bloo. Why, I had voted for Andy Jaxon seven times and for every other Democratic candidate as many times each election as possible, in hopes uv bein rewarded with a post offis. No man has drunk more whiskey for the Party than I hev—none has done it more willin. So the Republicans and Abolitionists called us staunch Northren sons of Democracy “Copperheads” and drafted jest sech uv us as didn’t hev ruptures in nine places and entirely enveloped with trusses, and varicose veins, corns and bunions, and unsound teeth and a palate that ain’t exactly right—wich wuz my case—or didn’t make for Canada where they’d be safe under the protectin © tail uv the British Lion—wich wuz likewise my case. But when I come back from Canada, thinkin that Stanton’s order to

draft wuz over, Nasby’s name begun to shine in the list uv martyrs, for 285

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soldiers in bloo laid a heavy hand onto my shoulder and I wuz led out to camp and allowed to volunteer to fight against my convictions—against my brethren in Grey wich hed took up arms in a righteous cause, to wit, to keep the nigger down, wich is his place. As soon as the rigiment hit Southern soil, one night I ran the guard and become a soldier uv the Democratic Confedricy. But I couldn’t abide the food, wich consisted uv jest what you could lay your hands on, and usually you couldn’t—or the pay, wich the Confedricy printed onto wall paper at every local printing press—or the style uv uniform, wich was a hole in the seat uv the pants with the ragged tail uv the shirt wavin gracefully there- ° from. Again I wuz forced to run the guard, this time the guard uv my Con-

fedrit brethren.

I knowed I wuz worse needed amongst my Northern

Democratic brethren, sech as Saint Vallandigham, to keep the torch uv troo Democrisy (wich means post offises for the faithful) burnin bright. It was ornery and cussid sufferins I went through—more than enough to choke a new Book of Martyrs Cwich I hev always bin) durin the years uv an unjest and unrighteous war. O, the eggins I endoored! How I wuz tid out of town upon rails! I don’t want to harrow up the public buzzum, but one night I wuz pulled out of bed. I wuz compelled to kneel onto my bare knees in the cold snow, and by a crowd uv laffin soldiers in hateful bloo, compelled to take the Oath of Allegiance—and drink a pint uv raw, undiluted water! After many more tribilations, like the Wanderin Jew, I wended my weary way to Kentucky, where, at Confedrit X Roads, I hoped to spend the few remainin years uv my life. Here the glad noos come! The Tyrant Linkin had bin laid low—halleloogy! Saint Androo Johnson was elevated where he could reward the Democrisy, wich ever hed bin his troo love, Southern man that he wuz. I wuz happy and contented. Under the Administration uv President Johnson, upon whose head blessins! I wuz at last give the enjoyment uv that end of the hopes uv all Democrats—a post offis! The Post Offis at Confedrit X Roads Cwich is in the Stait uv Kentucky) has four saloons within a stone’s throw, and a distillery ornamentin the landscape only a quarter uv a mile from where I write these lines, with the ruins of a burnt nigger school house in sight uv my winder. I wanted nothin more. I hoped to be allowed to live here and thus forever, and when

Death

should

come,

he would

find me

at Bascom’s

Saloon, enjoying the delightful company uv them wich I am proud to call my friends.

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race

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